Luke 24:36-49 · Jesus Appears to the Disciples
Easter Understanding
Luke 24:36-49
Sermon
by Harry N. Huxhold
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Edward Schillebeeckx, an outstanding Roman Catholic New Testament Scholar, some twenty years ago published in Holland his work titled The Understanding of Faith. Schillebeeckx made a most incisive effort to explain how Christians can understand their faith in the modern world. In doing so, he also had to carefully delineate the function of language in general. There are definite rules for the use of language. There are rules for the interpretation of language. Not only must Christians ask how the interpretation of their faith stands up in the light of modern thought and analysis, but they must also make their interpretation of the faith stand up among Christians. It is not difficult to point out that there are breakdowns in communication with the world as to significance of the Christian Gospel. However, it is also true that the communications between Christians are also not the best.

In spite of the fact that one denomination after another claims total allegiance to the scriptures, we have significant differences in interpretation. Then there are the so-called non-denominational Bible study groups who come along to tell us they will clear up the communications by taking everything literally, and all they do is muddy the waters. What Schillebeeckx set out to do was to find a common way in which we understand how we can go about the task of interpretation that will cut through the complex issues that make understanding difficult. In the Holy Gospel for today we hear how our Lord Jesus Christ himself had to deal with these issues with his own disciples.

The Bible Is Not Enough

You recognize the setting for the Holy Gospel for today as being the Upper Room, the night of the first Easter day. This is the Evangelist Luke's account of what we heard from the Fourth Gospel last Sunday. Luke records in the same manner how Jesus suddenly appeared to his disciples and greeted them. While both evangelists mention that Jesus displayed his scars, Luke mentions just how frightened the disciples were. Luke describes the confused emotions of the disciples most aptly. He says, "In their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering."

After Jesus convincingly ate of a broiled fish in their presence, Jesus deliberately talked to them about what had happened. He explained that this is what he had been telling them all along while he was with them. He had spoken to them on the basis of what had been in the scriptures. He had talked to them on the basis of Moses, the prophets and the psalms. Still they had not understood when he had been teaching and preaching to them. Now they had not understood what he had accomplished by coming to them in the Risen Christ. They did not believe with Jesus sitting right at their dinner table. To have the Bible, the scriptures, obviously was not enough. All those Bible classes they had attended with him did not clarify the issues. They did not understand. The communication of the Bible as such did not stand up for them.

Words About God Are Not Enough

We should also recognize that words about God were not enough for the disciples. It is very safe to say that the disciples must have had endless talks, debates, and dialogues among themselves about what Jesus meant to them. This we can safely surmise from the kind of discussions Jesus had with them. Over and over again we know that his teaching was designed to point them to the future. He was very careful to try to prepare them for the time when he would no longer be with them as just one of them. In this past Lenten season we reviewed how Jesus tried to create in them an awareness of what he had to confront in his death and resurrection. Listening to all that Jesus taught and preached, as well as what he did, had to provoke considerable speculation among the disciples. In addition the disciples had to be impacted by all the public debate about Jesus. They had to hear from friends, neighbors, and strangers about their involvement with this public figure.

There was talk, talk, talk, and more talk about Jesus. No wonder then that at one point Jesus asked the disciples what the people were saying about him. The disciples had all kinds of answers. When Jesus asked them who they thought he was, Peter could give the quick reply that they believed Jesus was the Messiah (Mark 8:27-30). However, when Jesus was crucified they did not understand. Also, when Jesus came to them as the Risen Savior, they did not understand. All their speculation, all their talking, all their consorting with one another and with others did not help them face this moment when they had to ask who Jesus really was. Thus, the Bible and human reason were insufficient in helping them to understand Jesus and his finest hour.

Literalism Is Not Enough

Well, the literalists and the historians would jump in at this point and say that what it takes is proof. If you can come up with the evidence and you can prove how something happened, then people will have to believe. That will not be enough either. There the disciples were in the Upper Room with the Risen Christ, and they could not believe their own eyes. The problem was they could not understand with their hearts. Jesus had to address that. He volunteered to let them handle him. He had to correct their notions that he may have been some kind of apparition like a ghost. He could tell that even that was not convincing. He ate a fish which he requested of them. Luke makes the point that he did it in their presence.

Jesus did everything to fill the need for people to satisfy their senses and perceptions of what had transpired. Yet that was not enough. They sat there stupefied. People live with the signs of God's providence, goodness, and mercy every day and still they do not believe what they should about God. People believe about the Bible and believe all kinds of things about God, but they do not believe with understanding. No matter how close they come to the kingdom, they are not true believers if they cannot recognize this crucified and Risen Christ who comes to them. That was the plight of the disciples. "In their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering." However, Jesus made believers out of them.

The Continuity

Jesus made believers out of the disciples by rehearsing for them the continuity of what God had been doing and saying all along. As the Risen Christ, Jesus sat there once again as the teacher of the disciples. He had to inform them that what he was telling them now was not different from what he had been saying to them all along. He said, "These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you -- that everything written about me in the law of Moses, the prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled." What Jesus meant was not simply that the Hebrew Scriptures were filled with predictions about the fact that Jesus would come. That would be a very thin and shallow interpretation of the value of the Hebrew tradition and witness. Rather, our Lord himself is present in the whole revelation of what God did and was doing for God's people.

The sense in which Jesus fulfilled the witness of the Hebrew Scriptures was not that Jesus simply did something that someone had foreseen he would do. Instead, Jesus fulfilled the scriptures in the sense that everything that God had done for the world and God's people through the centuries, God had now done in the life of our Lord Jesus Christ. What God did in the life, mission, and ministry of our Lord Jesus Christ gave meaning to everything he had revealed previously. The world did not have to wait for Jesus in order to be sure that God was in the world. God had been in the world and moving everything around the whole time. In Jesus, God gave us a close-up of what he had been doing. In Jesus, God also summarized what we can expect of God in the best and worst situations.

The Suffering As Key

As Jesus shared "everything written about him" with the disciples, "he opened their minds to understand the scriptures." The key to the scriptures was not what Mary Baker Eddy taught. It was the opposite of what she said. It was the opposite of what all those preachers of health and wealth teach. Jesus said to the disciples, "Thus it is written, that the Messiah is to suffer and to rise from the dead on the third day." The controlling element of the interpretation and understanding of the scriptures is that God is present in the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Now you cannot understand that apart from the Hebrew Scriptures, and you cannot understand the Hebrew Scriptures apart from what Jesus was saying.

Jesus sat there as the proof positive of how it all hung together. Jesus died in the world of sin and death to atone for the sins of the world and to destroy death by his perfect death. It was a perfect death not because he died beautifully. His death could not have been uglier. He died as a victim of injustice and the wrath of God. He died of crucifixion, regarded by Romans as the absolute worst of death sentences. Yet his death was perfect because he died trusting his Father, who had commissioned him to suffer what he must for the trespasses of the sinful and unbelieving world. It was a perfect death, because Christ did not surrender to death, but in perfect trust offered himself to his Father when death came. And God raised him on the third day.

For Forgiveness

Jesus did not leave it at that. He said, "The Messiah is to suffer and to rise from the dead on the third day, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed in his name to all nations." That is the purpose of all the activity of God and the purpose of the life, death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. People are to be made believers so that they know they can repent of their sins before God and be forgiven by this gracious and Holy God who delights in sharing his righteousness with us. A literal and yet more free translation of this would be, "Repentance for the forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed as Gospel." We have to get it straight. It is not enough to believe that there is a God. Not enough to believe something about God. Not enough to believe that God is all powerful or that God can punish.

When the Hebrews lingered as slaves in Egypt, even Pharaoh could say a number of times that he believed something about God. Pharaoh could also admit that he had sinned. Yet Moses knew Pharaoh did not trust and love God. Nor should we think it is remarkable if people say that they believe there is a god. To believe God is to be able to trust that our God forgives us in the Lord Jesus Christ. The point is that God has reconciled us to himself through his Son, our Lord, that God forgives us and that he will also raise us from the dead. That is why we can understand the Scriptures. We can understand them if we begin with that faith and trust in God, who is the Lord of life and death.

You Are Witnesses

Jesus knew that the disciples did not catch on fully as yet. He said that the movement to get this word out about the gracious God would have to begin at Jerusalem. There, he said, "You are witnesses of these things. And see, I am sending upon you what my Father promises; so stay here in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high." That was setting the stage for Pentecost when the disciples did get the message loud and clear and were able to preach with power the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. It all began with faith and trust in God.

The disciples grew in their understanding of the scriptures because they had this saving faith to begin with. At the same time for fifty days they kept reading the scriptures with the understanding Jesus gave them, and the scriptures enlarged their faith to propel them into their great movement of witnessing and missionizing. That was the conclusion made by the Roman Catholic scholar Schillebeeckx. After a thoughtful and studied examination of the rule for communication, the whole business of language and its implications, he stated it quite aptly. He wrote that theology, that is a system of study about the word of God, is nonsense without faith. At the same time, faith without a theology is "hardly worthy of the name of faith." What we should come away with from the Upper Room today is that our Lord taught us that the key to understanding the scriptures is his death and resurrection, which should be for the preaching of the forgiveness of sins, and that we can enhance that faith by continuing to read what the whole scriptures say about him."

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Which Way To Jesus?, by Harry N. Huxhold